No, Chelsea Clinton isn’t over the 2016 election, either.

The daughter of the failed presidential candidate — who this week admitted she’s not over the election that occurred some 18 months ago — is calling on Britons to protest President Trump when he visits the United Kingdom.

“Well, I’ve been to multiple protests since the election. Charlotte’s been to at least three, maybe four. Aidan’s been to one. If I lived in Britain I would show up to protest, because I don’t agree with what he’s doing to degrade what it means to be an American,” Clinton told The Guardian of Trump’s planed visit in July.

In the interview, Chelsea displayed little sympathy for Ivanka Trump.

“She’s an adult. She can make the choices for herself. I mean, she’s 36,” Clinton said.

“We are responsible for our choices. In 2008 I was really proud to support my mum – but I disagreed with her fundamentally on a few things, particularly her then opposition to equal marriage rights for LGBTQ Americans. I never defended that position, because it wasn’t what I believed was the right thing to do.”

As for an impeachment, which many Democrats are baying for, Clinton said she’s not thinking about that “yet.”

“I don’t think about that yet,” she told the paper.

“But I strongly believe it’s important that Robert Mueller be allowed to continue his investigation [into Russian collusion in the election]. I’m more focused on what can I do to help elect Democrats.”

This week, Democrat Rep. Al Green acknowledged impeachment would be on the table if Democrats capture the majority this fall in the House of Representatives.

“There’s a good likelihood there will be articles of impeachment” against Trump, Green said.

“Here is a point that I think is salient, and one that ought to be referenced. Every member of the House is accorded the opportunity to bring up impeachment. This is not something the Constitution has bestowed upon leadership. It’s something every member has the right and privilege of doing,” he said.

Meanwhile, “Were Ivanka to succeed her father in the White House, as some have speculated, would the election of the first female president still constitute a triumph for feminism?” the paper asked.

“Well, I didn’t support Sarah Palin when she was the vice-president nominee in 2008,” she answered.

“And I hope my son is as much a feminist as my daughter. I think it is more about what we stand for, and how we do it, than the gender of the person there.”